Walmart Inc

NYSE: WMT
$91.82
+$2.32 (+2.6%)
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WMT Articles

Nobody expects another day like Black Monday, but right now, it may make sense for investors to shift from momentum to a total return strategy.
24/7 Wall St. has compiled 10 of the top business news items, where there was specific company news driving the shares, for the week ended Friday, October 13, 2017.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Thursday include Ardelyx, Juniper, Kroger, Phillips 66, Square, Transocean and Walmart.
Walmart, Johnson & Johnson, McDonald's, and Visa pushed the DJIA higher on Wednesday.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Wednesday include AbbVie, Gilead, Johnson & Johnson, Potash, Schlumberger, Visa and Walmart.
Tuesday was a positive day for the U.S. exchanges with all three major indices hitting a new intraday high. Crude made a solid jump on the day pushing back from its loss last week. The S&P 500...
Walmart, Coca-Cola, Caterpillar, and Chevron were the top gainers on the DJIA Tuesday.
Walmart expects it current fiscal year online sales to increase by 40% year over year. The retail giant is so confident that it said it would kick off a new $20 billion share repurchase plan.
As the holidays approach and the number of returns increases, Walmart may have found an important edge over all its competition.
Walmart has launched a new process for fast drop-off of returns, Harvey Weinstein has been fired due to sexual harassment allegations, and more important headlines.
Chevron, Verizon, General Electric, and Walmart sank the DJIA on Friday.
When Walmart acquired New York City delivery service Parcel on Tuesday, the company succeeded in entering a market that has been closed to it forever. That's a big deal.
Amazon.com's powerful e-commerce empire has long been a threat to retailers everywhere, but with its acquisition of Whole Foods this summer its presence is even more pronounced.
Tesla confessed to a "production bottleneck," Facebook disclosed how many people have seen Russian ads on its site, and more important headlines.
More than half of Americans don't think stores should be open for business on Thanksgiving Day. More than 50 retailers have already said they'd be closed and more are expected to follow.